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Hey, I'm Neil Patel. I'm determined to make a business grow. My only question is, will it be yours?

About Neil Patel

He is a New York Times best selling author. The Wall Street Journal calls him a top influencer on the web, Forbes says he is one of the top 10 marketers, and Entrepreneur Magazine says he created one of the 100 most brilliant companies. He was recognized as a top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 30 by President Obama and a top 100 entrepreneur under the age of 35 by the United Nations.

Hey, I'm Neil Patel. I'm determined to make a business grow. My only question is, will it be yours?

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I really enjoyed this article! It’s hard, sometimes when I blog for clients, to think of more things to say. I really appreciated what you said about doing research. This is definitely something I can keep in mind.

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Thank you. Alisha.

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Thank you Neil! Your blog posts cover exactly what I try to teach my marketing assistants. Because you write them, I don’t have to 🙂

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Awesome, happy to help.

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Hey Neil!

Great content as always, will be great for my research on a new blog post. Keep it up!

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Great stuff, Karl.

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Hey Neil, ironically I found a mistake where you added the same words right after each other. See below, copied directly from your post:

“What do I mean by “deep?” I’ll explain, but first, let me show you why depth

I’ll explain, but first, let me show you why depth matters because that will help us understand what “deep” looks like in a real world example.

So THAT is your SECRET! Using the exact same words “I’ll explain, but first, let me show you why depth” added 10 extra words to your post! :o)

Ok, so you owe me now. ;o)

Reply

It’s fixed. Not sure if was a glitch or if someone on your team saw my comment and fixed it. Anyway, great post (as always) and very timely as well. I’m going to be writing some content soon so this info is VERY helpful and actionable! Thank you Neil !!

Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies; Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals - IBEI

Date Written: July 14, 2004

Abstract

Dieser Aufsatz zeichnet die US-Völkerrechtspolitik in einem hegemonialen Kontext nach. Er analysiert die Verbindungslinien zwischen einem weithin diagnostizierten Rückzug der USA vom Völkerrecht und der liberalen Umgestaltung der Völkerrechtsordnung nach und sieht beide Phänomene als eng aufeinander bezogen an. This article traces US policies towards international law in an age of American hegemony. It analyses how the widely perceived retreat from international law is connected to the remaking of the international legal order in a liberal vein and understands both phenomena as intimately connected.

Note:
Downloadable document is in German.

Keywords:
international law; United States; hegemony; liberal international order

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New java migrations are
discovered automatically
through classpath scanning at runtime. The scanning is recursive. Java migrations in subpackages of the specified ones are also picked up.

Unlike SQL migrations, Java migrations by default do not have a checksum and therefore do not participate in the change detection of Flyway’s validation. This can be remedied by implementing the
MigrationChecksumProvider
interface. Your implementation of the
getChecksum()
method can then provide your own checksum, which will then be stored and validated for changes.

By default, Flyway always wraps the execution of an entire migration within a single transaction.

Alternatively you can also configure Flyway to wrap the entire execution of all migrations of a single migration run within a single transaction by setting the
group
property to
true
.

If Flyway detects that a specific statement cannot be run within a transaction due to technical limitations of your database, it won’t run that migration within a transaction. Instead it will be marked as
non-transactional
.

By default transactional and non-transactional statements cannot be mixed within a migration run. You can however allow this by setting the
Marsell Metallic Wedge LuvYoIZzmY
property to
true
.

If your database cleanly supports DDL statements within a transaction, failed migrations will always be rolled back (unless they were marked as non-transactional).

If on the other hand your database does NOT cleanly supports DDL statements within a transaction (by for example issuing an implicit commit before and after every DDL statement), Flyway won’t be able to perform a clean rollback in case of failure and will instead mark the migration as failed, indicating that some manual cleanup may be required.

Migrations are primarily meant to be executed as part of release and deployment automation processes and there is rarely the need to visually inspect the result of SQL queries.

There are however some scenarios where such manual inspection makes sense, and therefore Flyway Pro and Enterprise Edition also display query results in the usual tabular form when a
SELECT
statement (or any other statement that returns results) is executed.